I’m thinking of Frederick Douglass’ response to the Dred Scott decision:
“Such a decision cannot stand. God will be true though every man be a liar. We can appeal from this hell-black judgment of the Supreme Court, to the court of common sense and common humanity.
We can appeal from man to God. If there is no justice on earth, there is yet justice in heaven.”
“You may close your Supreme Court against the black man's cry for justice, but you cannot, thank God, close against him the ear of a sympathising world,
nor shut up the Court of Heaven. All that is merciful and just, on earth and in Heaven, will execrate and despise this edict of Taney.”
“As monstrous as it appears, we can meet it in a cheerful spirit.
This very attempt to blot out forever the hopes of an enslaved people may be one necessary link in the chain of events preparatory to the downfall and complete overthrow of the whole slave system.”
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This country cannot be a genuine democracy until we address the interlocking injustices that impact the 140 million poor and low-income people here:
systemic racism in all its forms, from voter suppression to mass incarceration to resegregation of public schools to the mistreatment of our Latino brothers and sisters and immigrants to the continuing injustice toward indigenous people.
There is ecological devastation, denial of health care. Conviction is something you don’t pick up when you’re born. You learn it through historical osmosis.
Not only are there many flaws with how poverty is measured, but even before the pandemic, there were 140 million people who were poor or living in real economic insecurity.
The plot by racist militia groups in MI to kidnap the governor reveals the dangerous moment we are in. Commentators are clamoring for verbal denunciation of these groups. And they should be denounced, but both liberal & conservative white people fail to understand that ...
it really means nothing to denounce racial hate groups if you don’t undo the policies, practices & philosophies that fertilized their existence in the first place.
Denouncing violent racist militias is important but at times is seen as an anemic response by Black people, because many white people, in years gone by and currently, publicly denounced racist militias but privately supported their racist political agenda.
... O king, also refers to you. It means that the High God has sentenced my master the king: You will be driven away from human company and live with the wild animals. You will graze on grass like an ox. You will be soaked in heaven’s dew.
This will go on for seven seasons, and you will learn that the High God rules over human kingdoms and that he arranges all kingdom affairs.
26 “The part about the tree stump and roots being left means that your kingdom will still be there for you after you learn that it is heaven that runs things.
I’m glad the truth about Trump’s taxes & corrupt business dealings is coming out, but it’s so sad to hear politicians & pundits say “this will do it.”
You mean to tell me, after all Trump’s done — all the virus deaths, all the racism, all the xenophobia, all the lies — his taxes is the thing that will finally bring him down? Sad sad sad ...
It’s sad to see some politicians going all in on this, and then they stop talking about immigrants in detention camps, the pain of native Americans, the oppression of poor people. It’s just sad!